Patroclus was one courageous and skillful man. Truly, he had the strength and ability just as much as Achilles. He could have even killed Hector if the deities did not convene against him and plan his death. Anyone can say that he committed a fatal error when he disobeyed Achilles' command of retreating from the battle when once the ships are geared up, but he only did that because he wanted to prove something. He was a man who was ready to sacrifice even his own life for the sake of the feat of his country. The concern of his fellow warriors during his death was astonishing – from the handling of his corpse to his burial, and everyone really felt the loss of someone very kind and deeply beloved. This event in the book was a testimony that he was a great fellow.
Patroclus
Troy Versus Iliad
As I know, Troy is only an adaptation from the book, but it does not mean that the film should really be consistent with the book. I believe that the writer of the film has all the right to present the Trojan War in a different perspective, away from the mythical side of the book. Perhaps, he just wanted the battle to be realistic, without the deities participating and manipulating the situations. In real life, you do not see gods and goddesses taking people out of their troubles, granting them exceptional strength and determination, nor warriors fighting everyday not killing each other. The movie is probably closer to what really happened in the Trojan War.
On the whole, both book and film were only products of what we call oral tradition, a story passed on to generations after generations, a story which is likely to change. It has been so many years since the Trojan War and its story may have evolved, but the story presented in the movie Troy will always be a portion of the traditional cycle of the epic-myth Iliad.
If I were Homer, I would not care if they made a different adaptation of the story I have written, especially Troy. Besides, filmmakers nowadays would not only base their movie on a single book. Filmmakers should also source from other materials like history books.
The Apple of Discord and Menelaos
The contemptibly imprudent Alexandros had never thought that his irrational audacity by capturing Menelaos’ woman would result in majestic siege and waging of wars. It was not peculiar to see Alexandros slinking back into the ranks while his heart was sinking after he saw Menelaos in his fine suit of armor. Hector believed that Alexandros was handsome, but a man without fortitude, and people often saw him as a contemptible public pest for being the cause of war in the City of Troy. Because of this, he was induced to settle the conflict in a duel, at which Menelaos also agreed to.
Helen’s compassion for her husband was apparent during the fight. She longed for her husband of the old days, for home and family. The duel had been almost a glorious victory for the strong fighter Menelaos, but Aphrodite disrupted by taking Alexandros in a mist to Helen’s chamber ruining the duel before the decision happens. Helen scolded Alexandros for boasting once the he was a better man in a fair fight. While Athena incapacitated Menelaos by having him shot by an arrow of Pandarus, which roused the hostilities among the Achaians and Trojans once more.
As Menelaos hoped to get Helen back, Crisostomo Ibarra also purposed to take up and save Maria Clara, his beloved woman, from the abuse and cruelty of the Spanish colonialists.
These zealous and altruistic men, Menelaos and Ibarra, were truly an epitome of cleverness and heroism.
References:
The Iliad, Homer, WHD Rouse
ECAST World Literature, Serrano & Lapid
The Iliad, Homer, WHD Rouse
ECAST World Literature, Serrano & Lapid
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